The Bottoms of PIQF


TFQ said that after going to a big show she always wants to go on a diet, which set my mind to thinking about rear ends. Not really what I wanted to be thinking about at a quilt show, after all, but there you have it. As luck (maybe not the exact word?) would have it, three forward thinking quiltmakers made quilts with butts. I would have never thought of rear ends as a design idea, but it is definitely an idea.

Aside from patooties, there were other themes we saw at the show:

  • Sunflowers were big
  • Trees – there were lots of beautifully shaped trees in quilts
  • Animals in photo realistic type quilts were also everywhere
  • Trapunto was evident
  • People are doing some amazing quilting, which is a comment I made last year, but this year they are pushing the envelope even further.
  • Many more male vendors at the show
  • Packs of fabric rather than bolts and loose fat quarters 🙁
  • Lots of patterns and kits

There were lots of quilts with sunflowers! They were beautiful and it was amazing to see the artistry and work in some of the quilts. It made me wonder if the Sunflower Council did a lot of advertising in quilt magazines last year?

It was new to see so many males selling in fabric and notions booths. Men have always sold sewing machines, but there they were in the booths selling fabric. One guy from the Apple Scrapyard (see this post to learn more about them-very nice people) wanted to show me how to make a fan quilt. He was adorable and so friendly. I felt bad turning him down, but a big guy sitting in a booth filled with pastel colored Moda fabrics really made me smile.

The sad part is that many booths had only kits (including fabric and pattern) or packs of pre-selected fabric. As you could tell from the photos from yesterday, I had no trouble finding fabrics to buy, but there were many I passed up, because the vendors would not open the pack for me so I could just buy one or two fabrics. I hope the trend, which is obviously moving in that direction, doesn’t end up with having only packs and kits available. Don’t get me wrong, there is NOTHING wrong with kits. It is a good way for a beginner to start, but kits are not for me. There is also nothing wrong with packs. One of my favorite vendors, who wasn’t at PIQF for the second year in a row(!!!), Foothill Fabrics, does FANTASTIC packs. Her fabrics packs are right up my alley: all dots or all stripes or all of a line of fabulously bright colors. I just don’t want to buy packs every time from every vendor. I especially don’t want to buy packs centered around a large scale floral or a conversational print. The bottom line is that I want to choose my own fabric and put it into my own designs. I can certainly admire quilts made from kits and fabric packs, but that is not what I want to do.

Again, there were quilts, clearly made from a pattern, where the pattern maker was not credited. There were even some quilts that were labeled as ‘original designs.’ I think it is wrong to buy a pattern, make the blocks, rearrange them and call it an original design. It is an interpretation of a pattern, but not original.

I know this brings up the subject of blocks, especially classic* ones. If someone else designed the block, can it ever be part of an original arrangement? A complicated question, but I think it can. If you see a quilt, and remake it choosing fabrics as close to the originals as possible, the same setting, quilting and binding, then it is not an original work. If you see a quilt with a block you admire, you make a bunch of blocks in different fabrics and rearrange them in a new and original setting, then it is, if not an original design, an original interpretation of a classic block. I just think it is fair to let the world know where you got the idea. When/if TFQ and I enter the basket quilt into a show, I will certainly say that I saw the quilt at PIQF 2007. If I know the quiltmaker’s name, I will include that as well.

You can find a number of photos from the show here.

N.B. I don’t like the term ‘traditional’ to refer to blocks or quilts, because it seems to imply reproduction fabrics. I like to use classic blocks, but use new and fun fabrics in them.